THE PYRAMIDS OF GIZA.
Everyone who comes to Egypt has heard of the pyramids, but comparatively few know more about them than
that they are tall and pointed, and, in a vague way, that they are very old. Some people have an idea that they were the buildings that the Children of Israel built for Pharaoh under the lash of Egyptian overseers, and it surprises
many when they come to realize that the pyramids had been
standing for more than a thousand years before the Children
of Israel ever saw Egypt.
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| GIZA PYRAMIDS |
Truly the pyramids are worth seeing beyond most sights that men travel far to see ; they are the oldest structures of stone in all the world and they are among the great things which cannot be hackneyed or belittled by the crowds that go to look at them : electric trams and picnic parties round about their base may seem incongruous and vulgar, but let us move but a few yards away into the solitude of the desert and we cannot but feel the solemn majesty of these mighty tombs which have looked down on so many generations of mankind.
For they are tombs, the greatest tombs in the world ; tombs of kings who believed themselves gods and, nearly 5000 years ago, prepared for themselves a resting place that they thought fitting for them. Great kings and wealthy they must have been to have possessed such vast sums as the Pyramids must have cost.
- How did they get their wealth ?
- Why are their tombs here at Giza ?
- Why did they want to build such tombs at all ?
It will help us to answer these questions if we take our stand on the pyramid plateau and look out over the land
of Egypt. Northwards there is the Delta, a wide, rich plain; to the south there is a narrow, ribbon-like strip of valley
which continues right along the Nile up to the Sudan, with
the desert always close by on either side. In the oldest times of which there is any record, there were two different countries, the north land and the south land, with independent
rulers ; but, about 3500 B.C. they were united under Menes
or Mena , who was the first king of all Egypt and who built a town at the junction of the two lands to be a capital for the whole country.
The name of this town was Memphis
and it lay along the Nile for some miles between the sites of the modern villages of Giza and Bedrashein.
Now, as the Egyptians,
ancient and modern, always bury on the desert whenever
it is practicable and it is always practicable in Upper Egypt
because the cultivated part is so narrow we should expect
to find a big cemetery on the desert near any place where
there has been a big town, and where there was a great capital
we should naturally look for a very large and rich burying
ground.
And accordingly the Memphis cemetery stretches
all along the desert from Abu Roash in the north to Dahshur
in the south, and it is full of graves of every degree, for every- body, rich and poor, who died in Memphis for something
like 4000 years was buried there.
The soil of Egypt is very rich and needs only some
mechanical skill to regulate the irrigation, for it to produce
abundantly. By the time of Menes there was not only an
irrigation system but power vested in the king and in the great
landowners to call out labour as required, so we may be sure
that a wealthy man in those days had plenty of good things
in his house. His estate provided meat, bread, vegetables,
wine and beer ; linen was spun and pottery made by his servants and retainers ; besides that, gold, copper and precious
stones were imported from the Sudan, from Sinai, and perhaps even from Cyprus and Syria, so he certainly had around him
beautiful vases, jewellery and embroideries, but the house
itself was only built of brick, plastered indeed and decorated,
but not made to last.
Why then did he make his grave so
solid and so expensive ?
It is scarcely possible for modern mankind to enter
sufficiently into the minds of their primitive forefathers to be able
to explain their religious ideas, but one thing which stands out very clearly in the case of the ancient Egyptians is their belief in a continued existence after death.
It was hardly immortality, or rather it was a very
limited immortality, fey all depended on the preservation of the body from decay, and the measures necessary were so expensive and so complicated that they were probably not within reach of any but the rich. These ideas developed and
altered greatly as time went on, but in the early days of which
we are now speaking, it seems that there was little chance
for a poor man to exist in the next world at all unless, perhaps,
he could still survive there as an attendant to his master.
The Egyptians could not conceive the spiritual part of an individual existing without a bodily tenement to contain it, and the strangest thing as it seems to us is their belief that the body must be treated as if it still had needs and must
be supplied with food and drink. But by the aid of a magical
ritual this could be done.
Firstly, the preservation of the body was attended to by
embalmment or mummification as it is more usually called then, as fine and strong a coffin was provided as the available resources could afford, then it was lowered down a shaft into a chamber hewn out of the rock, the chamber was walled
up, the shaft filled in and then the question came as to how
the necessary nourishment was to be provided.
A house was built above the funeral vault and in it, or in front of it, was a chapel where worshippers could come with offerings of food, flowers, perfumes, "and all good and pure things". These "were laid down before a sort of niche in the chapel wall, shaped like a door and inscribed with magic texts which should make it possible for the spiritual part of the dead man, which still existed, the "Ka" as it was called, to come through this imitation doorway and partake of the offerings which had (been placed there for him.

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